Essential Takeaways
• Stress is a state of worry or tension that everyone experiences from time-to-time. While some stress can be good, continuous stress can lead to a host of physical and cognitive health setbacks.
• Deep breathing exercises, regular physical activity, and healthy dietary changes are great places to start stress management.
• Our new Stress Relief Supplement, Stress Relief BioSeries™, features an instant and extended-release formula to help support cortisol levels and reduce stress.*
In our ideal worlds, we’re all super zen — we watch the sun rise, we throw our phones in the ocean, we glide through our days on a cloud of infinite gratitude.
But in real life, there’s stress, and even the most zen person you know gets stressed out. Between deadlines, appointments, and notifications (oh my!), there’s no way to opt out of stress entirely, and that’s okay. Some types of stress can be good for us — like the stress that triggers our fight or flight response, for example. (2) How else would we know to duck behind the grapefruit when we see that coworker at the grocery store?
The key to solving stress is all in how you manage it. Quick hits of stress may be helpful, but frequent stress can deliver a substantial blow to our health and wellness. So let’s talk tactics: proactive, science-backed methods that you can use to influence how your body responds to stress, building your day-to-day resilience.
The Science Behind Our Stress Response
When we experience stress, our bodies, specifically our adrenal glands, produce an elevated level of the hormone cortisol. (3) Some studies have shown that cortisol levels can increase 9X during stressful situations. (4)
In situations that require a high level of attention, these elevated cortisol levels are key to keeping us alert and make glucose readily available to our brain. (3) However, cortisol should ebb and flow, and persistently elevated levels can disrupt daily health.